tjfujii@scif.com Member
Posts: 77
Joined: Dec 2002
|
Saturday July 23, 2005 9:58 AM
|
|
There is an aspect to all of this that you may wish to consider. The more you fuss and fume and tape and complain, the more the professionals responsible on all sides of your case will start to see you as a crackpot. Seriously. it's not just the IC that will begin to think this way, your attorney, the doctors, the judge him/herself will begin to become very annoyed with you and your constant complaints and suspicions. This is because what is for you a new and fantastic situation, is for the rest of us simply our day to day jobs. We're here every day, dealing with thousands of cases, year after year, and yours is just one of them. If you tick everyone off, whereever there is a situation that could go a way that is easier for you or harder, guess which way everyone is going to go? And I can't tell you how many times an app attorney with a contentious client has called me up and basically said the client is obnoxious and difficult and let's just settle the thing and get rid of him. And that attorney, although still fighting for his client, isn't fighting very hard at that point, and isn't arguing for much settlement money either. They just want the client gone.
This affects judges too - although the app attorney usually shields the judge from the cranky client as much as possible and tries to avoid going to trial. When you're in pro per though, it's just you. And although you have a right to represent yourself and the system is supposed to be informal enough for an IW to deal with without the need for any attorney, it is in fact very complex and nuanced and difficult to wade through intelligently without the proper background. There is nothing more tiresome than someone with just enough knowledge to be dangerous grinding the entire process to an agonizing crawl.
So, attitude becomes everything. If you're going to do things that slow things down and stop the usual flow of the system from the point of view of the professionals in the system, then it is important to present yourself properly while doing that. If you appear to be an angry cranky irritable crackpot, those professionals will dismiss you as mentally challenged and possibly gaming the system and that will color their decisions about how to handle your case, the judge included. If you appear to be sincere and honest and respectful while still expressing your rights, the professionals will still be annoyed that you're slowing things down or making their jobs more difficult, but they won't necessarily feel ill will toward you. And that can make a big difference in how things go for you.
I'll give you an example. A stipulation or findings and award comes out for a substantial amount of money, and the applicant is being evicted and really needs the money. So he calls up and explains the situation and asks nicely if we can get that money out to him asap. He's sincere, he's not obnoxious or demeaning or shouting his rights, he's asking for consideration. And although the money won't actually be considered unreasonably late for another 18 days, and the adjuster has a million things to do right now, and the case is complicated and the award is difficult to pay (I won't explain that last part, but awards can be very time consuming and difficult to pay much of the time), the adjuster will usually do what they can and process the thing as soon as possible. They can put themselves in the applicant's place and sympathize and they'll do it.
Now, give the same situation with an applicant who is obnoxious and appears unreasonable and fights you tooth and nail over every little thing and has just been very difficult all around to deal with. Not feeling the love there, and not going to go out of the way to make things happen quicker for that applicant. It's not a revenge scenario, it's a why bother? scenario.
Think of it as a kind of karmic retribution of the work comp system. You put in negative energy, you'll get negative energy thrown right back at you. And this applies to every professional every step of the way - the treating doctor, the QME, the AME, the app attorney, the adjuster, and the judge. Your credibility is very important when you are litigating anything, so be careful how you are perceived. That doesn't mean you shouldn't stand up for yourself, or that you shouldn't try to gain knowledge and make informed choices in this matter, but just don't forget how to present yourself while doing it.
As for taping your exams, look at it this way. Most people when faced with a day to day interaction of some kind that is usually person to person, become highly suspicious of folks who suddenly feel the need to get the interaction on tape. All kinds of alarm bells go off. If you're honest with yourself you know you'd feel the same way if you were the doctor. The doctor doesn't have to be doing anything wrong, it's just the idea that this patient you are examining is so on guard and mistrustful that he demands to tape the exam, your comfort level drops to the basement. Doctors pay through the nose for malpractice insurance and are very gun shy when it comes to litigation. And nothing says litigation like a patient with a tape recorder. So while you may have a right to do something, the things you do may have unintended consequences.
"That would be a good thing for them to cut on my tombstone: Wherever she went, including here, it was against her better judgment." Dorothy Parker (1893 - 1967), 'But the One on the Right,' in New Yorker, 1929
|
|